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authorDodji Seketeli <dodji@redhat.com>2012-05-24 19:37:45 +0000
committerDodji Seketeli <dodji@gcc.gnu.org>2012-05-24 21:37:45 +0200
commit165ca58dc37d9c10443e5cf1daa836edb355a0f0 (patch)
tree9447b3399ccf2b1a74d55172202e0c240c861cdf /libgfortran
parenta5dedb5e59b72167bcc501f28a8a8c08b9465070 (diff)
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Make unwound macro expansion trace less redundant
As discussed previously, the unwinder for macro expansion is quite verbose [1]. This patch proposes to address that shortcoming. Consider this test case: $ cat -n test.c 1 #define MYMAX(A,B) __extension__ ({ __typeof__(A) __a = (A); \ 2 __typeof__(B) __b = (B); __a < __b ? __b : __a; }) 3 4 struct mystruct {}; 5 void 6 foo() 7 { 8 struct mystruct p; 9 float f = 0.0; 10 MYMAX (p, f); 11 } $ The output of the compiler from trunk yields: $ cc1 -quiet ./test.c ./test.c: In function ‘foo’: ./test.c:2:31: error: invalid operands to binary < (have ‘struct mystruct’ and ‘float’) __typeof__(B) __b = (B); __a < __b ? __b : __a; }) ^ ./test.c:2:31: note: in expansion of macro 'MYMAX' __typeof__(B) __b = (B); __a < __b ? __b : __a; }) ^ ./test.c:10:3: note: expanded from here MYMAX (p, f); ^ $ After this patch, the compiler yields: $ ./cc1 -quiet ./test.c ./test.c: In function ‘foo’: ./test.c:2:31: error: invalid operands to binary < (have ‘struct mystruct’ and ‘float’) __typeof__(B) __b = (B); __a < __b ? __b : __a; }) ^ ./test.c:10:3: note: in expansion of macro 'MYMAX' MYMAX (p, f); ^ $ The gotcha is, in the general case, we cannot simply eliminate the context of the macro definition. That is, the line from the first output that is redundant with the first diagnostic line that has line/column number: ./test.c:2:31: note: in expansion of macro 'MYMAX' __typeof__(B) __b = (B); __a < __b ? __b : __a; }) ^ We cannot simply eliminate that context of macro definition because there are cases where the first diagnostic that has a line/column number doesn't point to a location inside the definition of the macro where the relevant token is used. For instance: $ cat -n test2.c 1 #define OPERATE(OPRD1, OPRT, OPRD2) \ 2 OPRD1 OPRT OPRD2; 3 4 #define SHIFTL(A,B) \ 5 OPERATE (A,<<,B) 6 7 #define MULT(A) \ 8 SHIFTL (A,1) 9 10 void 11 g () 12 { 13 MULT (1.0);// 1.0 << 1; <-- so this is an error. 14 } $ Which yields without the patch: $ cc1 -quiet ./test2.c ./test2.c: In function ‘g’: ./test2.c:5:14: error: invalid operands to binary << (have ‘double’ and ‘int’) OPERATE (A,<<,B) ^ ./test2.c:2:9: note: in expansion of macro 'OPERATE' OPRD1 OPRT OPRD2; ^ ./test2.c:5:3: note: expanded from here OPERATE (A,<<,B) ^ ./test2.c:5:14: note: in expansion of macro 'SHIFTL' OPERATE (A,<<,B) ^ ./test2.c:8:3: note: expanded from here SHIFTL (A,1) ^ ./test2.c:8:3: note: in expansion of macro 'MULT' SHIFTL (A,1) ^ ./test2.c:13:3: note: expanded from here MULT (1.0);// 1.0 << 1; <-- so this is an error. ^ $ Here, the line that has the context of macro definition: ./test2.c:2:9: note: in expansion of macro 'OPERATE' OPRD1 OPRT OPRD2; ^ is useful, because the first diagnostic that has line/column number wasn't pointing into the definition of the macro OPERATE, where the token '<<' is used. ./test2.c:5:14: error: invalid operands to binary << (have ‘double’ and ‘int’) OPERATE (A,<<,B) ^ So in this this case, displaying the macro definition context is not redundant. I think it is even desirable. The patch changes the output in that case to be: ./test2.c: In function ‘g’: ./test2.c:5:14: erreur: invalid operands to binary << (have ‘double’ and ‘int’) OPERATE (A,<<,B) ^ ./test2.c:2:9: note: in definition of macro 'OPERATE' OPRD1 OPRT OPRD2; ^ ./test2.c:8:3: note: in expansion of macro 'SHIFTL' SHIFTL (A,1) ^ ./test2.c:13:3: note: in expansion of macro 'MULT' MULT (1.0);// 1.0 << 1; <-- so this is an error. ^ $ It's shorter, but I believe it has all the information that was present before the patch. [1]: http://gcc.gnu.org/ml/gcc-patches/2012-05/msg00321.html Bootstrapped and tested on x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu against trunk. gcc/ Make unwound macro expansion trace less redundant * tree-diagnostic.c (maybe_unwind_expanded_macro_loc): Don't print context of macro definition in the trace, when it's redundant. Update comments. gcc/testsuite/ Make unwound macro expansion trace less redundant * gcc.dg/cpp/macro-exp-tracking-1.c: Adjust. * gcc.dg/cpp/macro-exp-tracking-2.c: Likewise. * gcc.dg/cpp/macro-exp-tracking-3.c: Likewise. * gcc.dg/cpp/macro-exp-tracking-4.c: Likewise. * gcc.dg/cpp/macro-exp-tracking-5.c: Likewise. * gcc.dg/cpp/pragma-diagnostic-2.c: Likewise. From-SVN: r187845
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